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23 designs you’ll love

As a result of Designer Daily’s first Group Writing Project, I’ve collected a bunch of interesting design links that people liked. It was really interesting to see what people came up with and to discover some new blogs or rediscover something about the other bloggers tastes and centers of interest.

Urban messenger bag, by Peter Bihr.

Not only this bag looks good, but it’s made with recycled components such as tubes and seatbelt straps.

The art of Andy Warhol by Pixel Pixie.

Pixel Pixie shares the experience of a trip at the museum, and an encounter with “Red Lenin”, one of Andy Warhol’s artworks.

La Gruyère insolite… (in french) by Ronald Sautebin.

Turning panoramas into crazy landscapes with the help of Photoshop.

Guiness advertising by Kate.

Walking through the history of the best-branded beer of the world: Guiness.

Designers that inspire by Aaron.

Aaron shares his love for minimal webdesign and sends out links to designers he admires.

3 sexy journals designs by Kyle Steed.

Definitly a must-read for note-takers.

Women web designer heroes by Kat Neville.

Kat introduces us to some of the best female web designers, worth a good look.

Paper is pretty by Lauren Marie.

Paper, the thing that every designer should love.

Symbaloo by Netter.

Introducing Symbaloo, a neat shared desktop.

Christopher David Ryan by Mitternacht.

Refreshing illustrations, discover the poetic univers of Christopher David Ryan.

Hooray cardboard furnishings by Will Anderson.

An ode to cardboard furnishings and other space saving furniture.

JCD logo by Arbenting.

Robert Bowen expresses his deep admiration of Jacob Cass’s Just Creative Design logo.

Daily Dose of Imagery by Ken Dyment.

Ken writes about his favorite photoblog: Daily Dose of Imagery, inviting you to follow Sam and his photography.

Logitech MX500 by Rarst.

Design review of the Logitech MX500 mouse, the ancestor to the Revolution mouse.

Type in Québec city by Ni Hao Ma girl.

An interesting walkthrough some street typographic elements of Québec City.

Frey Wille by Anca Foster.

Introducing amazingly designed jewellery from Vienna.

Font we Love (in malay) by iLoveIslam.

Sharing their favorite fonts, 3 gorgeous sans-serif fonts.

We made History (in french) by Lyonel Kaufmann.

Analyzing the graphic art that went along with Obama’s campaign.

MacBook laptops, the perfect design? by Cory O’Brien.

An ode to Apple’s MacBook Pro and its almost perfect design.

Saul Bass by Julia Spangler.

Great article about the man who reinvented movie intros.

Rui Viera by Audee.

A walkthrough this great portuguese designer’s work.

Belgrade CityScape by Danica.

Exploring serbian street typography.

11 pre-launch group writing projects logos by Jacob Share.

Jacob compares the design of several group writing projects pre-launch logos.

Popularity: 10% [?]

Winners of the “Design you Love” Group Writing Project

The “Design you Love” group writing project is now over and I’d like to thank all the participants for their great posts on the designs they loved. A blog post with every design and links will be published right after this one. Congratulations to the winners, I hope that you’ll all enjoy your prizes, sorry for the others. Everyone still has the opportunity to participate to the great group writing project at Blog Design Studio.

Thanks also to the sponsors who made this more fun and attractive: Templates Factory, DirJournal, The Group Writing Project blog, ThemeForest, FlashDen, Rockable Press, Uprinting and Premium Themes Now.

A special thanks too to Jacob Share who has been spreading the word about the contest on the Group Writing Project blog, he is taking part in the Blogging Idol so help him out by subscribing to his RSS feed. This way you’ll be notified of every group writing project going on.

Enough said, here is the list of winners chosen by a random number generator. You’ll all be contacted to get your prizes.

Ken Dyment
Wins a copy of “Trek: recent work by David Carson” donated by Templates Factory and one 125×125 ad space on the Group Writing Project blog.
Mitternacht
Wins a copy of “Helvetica: The Movie” and one 125×125 ad space on the Group Writing Project blog.
Kyle Steed
Wins $75 to spend on ThemeForest and FlashDen.
Lyonel Kaufmann
Wins a Premium Wordpress Theme from Premium Themes Now.
Mohd Rafie
Wins a Premium Wordpress Theme from Premium Themes Now.
Pixel Pixie
Wins a copy of the “How to be a Rockstar Freelancer“.
Anca Foster
Wins 250 business cards by Uprinting.
Rarst
Wins 250 business cards by Uprinting.
Angie Bowen
Wins 250 business cards by Uprinting.
Netter Report
Wins 250 business cards by Uprinting.

Popularity: 13% [?]

Design links for the week

World food programme, creative ad for the United Nations.

If you don’t want to miss any of the links shared, you can of course follow me on my Tumblelog if you are a Tumblr user.

Pentawards 2008
Awarding creative packaging.
Season’s greetings
Beautiful greeting card, great geometric design.
18 rules the best web developers follow
A list of good practices, bookmarked.
Horribly Photoshoped squirrels
Funny stuff…
Tank robot clock
Cute alarm clocks.
Modular shelves
Great work by Maria Yasko.
Culture Bus
Brilliant logo, not so sure about the version on the bus.
5 sickening habits of mainstream websites
Agree 100% with what’s said in this article.

Popularity: 7% [?]

Street spirit - Belgrade CityScapes

We communicate everyday with the street publics: design and architecture objects around us, our neighbours,  signs on the tops of the buildings in downtown of the city, department stores, city facades, or small billboards on bus stations in the form of ads. I find that street design in the form of typography that we see on the buildings, window shops, billboards, walls, road signs are very important part of city life as an analogue medium that sends the message to the passengers. As being someone who is researching and exploring digital performances in online world, my  “design I love” examples are randomly chosen on the streets in downtown of Belgrade, Serbia.

Street typography involves not only advertising goal in the message but also aesthetics and design in the context of that message. It can be static with an information (e.g. a poster, caution sign) or dynamic that changes habitus of everyday city consumers (e.g. billboards, window shops).What is common to them is variety of design graphic, typography styles (most of them are Cyrillic) and the message. So let’s go outdoors and explore Serbian street scene in this context.

dont be a goose - buy yourself a duck

Seen in Mandarina Duck store of industrial design goods made in Italy, downtown Belgrade.

Gallery of Academy of Arts, Kalemegdan

“Galerija - Izlozi” in Cyrillic: Gallery of Art Academy and street cloth art. Kalemegdan, old city.

Plazma keks

Plazma keks is one of the most famous Serbian brands - special unique kind of bisquit, similar to pettit beurre. Seen on bus station.

Beko and ex-Yugoslavia

Beko was the famous department chain store in former Yugoslavia. it is interesting nowadays to see nostalgia historic leftovers from that time: Yugoslavian mementos and Beko’s Cyrillic logo. Seen in lower Dorcol, downtown Belgrade.

Wall ad, in Latin Serbian, offering kitchen elements to order, which is quite unusual to see in downtown of the city.

Immerse your soul in design! This article is written by Danica Radovanovic to Design you love group writing project.

Popularity: 12% [?]

Crazy like a fish

This post is Julia Spangler’s entry to the Design You Love group writing project.

I’m in college. Most of you, at this point, are probably not. But since I’m sure you miss it, we’re going to start with a quiz. Here are three clues; let’s see if you can identify the object of my designerly affection:

He revolutionized movie title sequences. He said more with simple silhouettes and cutouts than can be said with the glossiest gradient mesh. His last name is also a fish.

Because of a design history project my freshman year, I know that these three components add up to Saul Bass. For the project each student had to research the professional biographies of five designers. I learned a lot of valuable facts (Cipe Pineles could draw a mean potato; Paul Rand was the logo king; Michael Bierut enjoys the color yellow), but Saul Bass’s work was the stuff that stuck with me after I received my grade. I was particularly blown away by the impact he made in film. He introduced the idea of incorporating the themes of the movie into the title sequence. Can you imagine doing that today? Finding a perfectly adequate system—those old lists of names sure were legible—and introducing creative design to enhance the meaning of the project as a whole? Bass had a vision of “what could be†that I find hugely inspiring.

This page contained an embedded video. Click here to view it.

Of his work, the sequence that affects me the most is Bass’s titles for Psycho. Just those lines of black, white, and gray are enough to make me feel uneasy. The kicker for me is when the lines come together vertically, but unaligned, creating the tension of bared teeth across the center of the screen… shivers! And watch the way the word “Psycho†shifts back and forth: it’s not a drastic movement, but it tells you that something isn’t quite right here.

As he pioneered this new area of design, Bass tried to find and convey the real psychology of the film, often utilizing very little imagery. It would be foolish to think that Bass’s considerations were 100% aesthetic: he was no doubt limited by the methods and media of his time. But even as technology improved, Bass kept a stripped-down approach in some of his work (check out the opening of Goodfellas).

In a landscape of static title cards, Bass introduced movement and meaning. Every time I see the opening to a Spider-Man movie or to Catch Me If You Can, I think about Bass for just a second, grateful for his contribution to the film and design industries, as well as to my general movie-going experience. Hopefully you’ll let Bass inspire you to think about how design can transform merely adequate systems into meaningful and creative ones.

Popularity: 16% [?]

Should we listen to music while working? The designers answer.

I recently published a post asking if listening to music while working was a good thing or not. I gave my opinion and asked some productivity experts what their thoughts were on that topic. The post had a lot of comments from fellow designers, and a blog post was even written on that topic on Pixelyzed.

Following is the opinion of my fellow designers, most of them being music listeners when working. Some of them listen to music because they think it helps them to get in the zone and others do so to override external noise. Most seem to agree that not every type of music is suitable for getting things done.

I got my start in design through music, by learning to design stuff for a band i was in. Ever since then music and design have gone hand in hand, there are times when i need the quiet, but there are also times when tuning the world out with some good music helps me focus and be more productive.

Aaron Irizarry

I think it really depends on the person whether or not they should have music going. I almost have to have it sometimes. I work much better with some motivational tunes than I do listening to my officemate yap his jaws off on the phone.

Aaron Lock

Interesting the difference in opinions on this subject. I personally have found myself to be productive with music and without music. I think it really depends on the project and what the overall atmosphere you’re trying to create to be more productive.

Arthur Brown

We were discussing just yesterday how bad it would be to go blind. I argued that I would probably be even worse to go deaf. I know the impact music has on me and know how it can turn a bad day into an OK day… The type of music, now that is a whole different cup of tea. But music, yes please…

Peter Monbailleu (Mirko’s comment: I’d rather go deaf for sure)

I think music stimulates creativity in its initial stage. I always like listening to music when I come up with concepts and ideas, it relaxes me and puts me in a great mood. However, when I am in the last stages of a design, or writing, it happened to me to realize after hours of being into it that music stopped playing a loong time ago. So my concentration level gets so high that even if music is playing in the background, I don’t hear it.

Anca Foster

I think the wrong question: it should be : WHAT music should we listen too…
Music is an inspiration to people for ages and i think if you hear the right music while you work then i think our work can be much easier :) and as you can see in our braintalk section on sharebrain.info most designers listen to music while they work.

Thomas (Mirko’s comment: the fact that most people do it doesn’t make it the right thing to do)

The hard part about a debate like this, is that it is largely based on individual experiences. That being said, I will just share my experience.
I work at a startup (www.techrigy.com), there are only a few of us in the office. My role in the company is pretty versatile so I end up working closely with everyone. This creates chaos at my desk. Constantly dropping one project to start another, only to be interrupted for a third project.
There are days (and nights) when I don’t want to access client info from the database, I don’t want to answer support calls or emails…I just want to write code. These are the times when I put throw my ear buds in and turn my iPod just loud enough that I wouldn’t know if an atomic bomb was dropped.
I have to say I am very productive, and when it comes to coding I feel displaced if I am not listening to music while doing it. Maybe it has just become such a standard that I don’t realize I’m even listening to music. But I am very focused and not distracted by things around me. I am also a musician, so perhaps music is just more a part of me than I realize

Bob Pease

I definitely think it’s a very personal, individual thing, as I have designer friends who must have absolute, nearly-zen-like silence when they design / work, whereas if I do not have a constant musical soundtrack, I am basically useless in terms of creative productivity.

Atherton Bartelby

I need to listen to music whilst working, as ironically I find noises a huge distraction. If someone is eating, tapping etc it can cause me huge grief, but I can happily listen to music at loud volumes.

Andy Harris

I’m the same as you really - for the stuff that need real brain power, I normally don’t listen - but if for example im sketching out some ideas or doing something repetative then music all the way!

Rob

Music is a great source of inspiration and stress reliever when working on projects. I know many need silence.
Music may be more indusive to production work then for designing. I find that it works well for both stages.

Calvin Lee

It is good thing definitely! Even more, I am more productive while creating something or writing if I listen to my last.fm.
I noticed that when i listen to classics, e.g. Mozart or Debussy - I am in perfect focus for work.
This doesn’t mean that I am skipping indie music, rock, alternative, nu-jazz. It depends on demand level of concentration while working something.
One of the reasons I always have music in the background is to exclude the outer noise of my neighbours or passengers from the street coming inside.

Danica

The music I chose for that article was definitely a personal choice, and studies do show that multi-tasking makes us less productive - this would include listening to music while working. On the other hand, if you turn down the music low enough, or if it is inherently ambient, or if you’ve listened to the song so many times that it has no novel value, then it intrinsically requires less cognitive attention, and the multi-tasking fact may not apply (I would argue it indeed doesn’t with the certain types of music).

Tyler Hayes (Mirko’s comment: ooops… sorry for the mistake)

I would say that the biggest factor of music’s effect on productivity is familiarity. When I’m working on something that requires my concentration, I listen to an album I’ve heard 5, 10, 100 times before. By that time, I know the melodies and all the words so well that I don’t even have to fully “listen†to understand what’s going on.
Conversely, if I’m listening to an album for the first time, or Last.fm radio, the music is totally unfamiliar, and requires more concentration than usual.
So if I’m in the middle of coding, I usually end up putting something old, familiar, and comforting like The Beatles. Some might find the music distracting, but personally, I find the lack of sound even more so.

Nigel

Cognitive science research has indicated that associations such as musical genre and especially individual songs lend to remembering. (In particular, one study foudn that students that sat in the same seats for an exam they took the course in did better than those randomly rearranged or in a different room altogether. There is also evidence that shows smelling the same smell as when you studied leads to enhanced recall ability.)
It may also be the case that tasks that are similar (not necessarily always repeated the exact same way) such as working your way around Photoshop or working on CSS markup) would be aided by the cue of associated stimulus. This agrees in part with Kris Rowlands of Fresh Focus, who I think has gone on to oversimplify the matter. He speaks of intution when it comes to dancing, but this is merely memory of the steps - both physical and mental - and then performed unconsciously. Your brain is still ‘remembering’ what to do without you having to be ultimately aware of it. The same applies for, say, Photoshop. You don’t sit and think about the keybindings you already know, you have enhanced productivity on account of unconsciously using them without having to consider the actions each time you perform the task, and it seems automatic. Saying that this is confined to physical activities is simply incorrect unless one admits that the act of pressing a key combination is a physical activity and far too splified.
That music distracts from thinking activities in a statistically significant way is not documented as far as I recall, though at the moment I don’t have my compendium of reseach databases at my disposal. In fact, at my university the Centre for Disabilities approves students with certain concentration related disorders to listen to music while writing exams in private or semi-private exams settings.
There is no black and white answer to this question and ultimately it comes down to whatever works for the individual. It is interesting to hear what other people think about it via their anecdotes, but keep in mind anecdotes are influenced by personal experience and we end up back at ‘whatever works for you.’

Angelina Fabbro (Mirko’s comment: my favourite answer, agree 100%)

My best work is done when listening to ‘my’ music. my concentration is much higher and focused. my job involves software programming. i say ‘my’ music has the music i listen to during work has to be what i regularly listen to and like. listening to the radio would definitely throw me off track.

Kushal

Personally, I used to be someone who couldn’t do serious work with noise in the background. Then even that because difficult until I discovered Tai Chi. 7 months was all it took. Now, 10 years later, my focus is still so strong that I can work with music and kids playing in the room. When I’m done a task, I’ll realize that I simply didn’t hear the music, it’s like it wasn’t even on.

Jacob from Group Writing Projects

I definetily cannot work without music or any of sounds in the background, but that’s just me :))

Dainis Graveris

Good question! I have an interesting contrast between the music I listen to at work and the music I listen to at home or in my car. My computer is filled with ambient, trip hop, instrumental and classical while at home or in the car I tend to listen to metal, industrial, ebm an synth pop.
My last.fm profile (http://www.last.fm/user/subsomatic) does lie either, Bonobo is my all-time favourite work music!

Kelly Baker

Popularity: 24% [?]

Design links for the week

The real Photoshop.

If you don’t want to miss any of the links shared, you can of course follow me on my Tumblelog if you are a Tumblr user.

Urban knitting
For sure the most inoffensive kind of graffiti.
20 amazing movie posters
Some good ones, some not so good…
100 years old smileys
That’s pretty cool.
Oops
Amazing packaging.
Clean font showcase
A good reference, bookmarked.
Modul
A great font family.

Popularity: 24% [?]


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